We don't have any current examples of working on a GMO, but I could give you an example of our wheat program. Wheat breeding is typically a public sector activity, and in Canada the wheat varieties are bred by organizations like Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, the University of Saskatchewan, and other universities across the country. We are working with those two groups in a collaboration, so that we can bring our biological expertise and our gene sequencing and our incredible genomic understanding of these organisms and plants and help the breeders, using their classic techniques, to more rapidly develop varieties.
In terms of GMO, as you know, canola is mostly a GMO across Canada. That's something that NRC was involved in decades ago in developing, along with the University of Saskatchewan and Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada.